101 to 150 (of 627)
1  2  3  4  ...13
 
Quebec. Claude Pijart’s father was the jewellery dealer of Queen Marguerite de Valois and the leading figures at court. Claude was first educated at
 
Marguerite Beaudry, who survived him. His son Louis tried in vain to succeed him as notary. André Vachon
 
. Hélène Bernier Coleman, New England captives, I, II. Sister St Ignatius Doyle, Marguerite Bourgeoys and her
Marguerite Bourdon de Saint-Jean-Baptiste and two other Hospitallers. On 26 June of the following year she was elected superior of the young community. She held her post until 1699, at which
 
he married Marguerite Bourque. In 1783 he came back to Quebec, but he was treated as a rebel and was dispossessed of the 80 acres of land he owned on the concession of La Grande-Acadie. He had to
 
, covers the period 1710–18. On 13 Feb. 1708, he had married at Quebec Marguerite Prieur, who gave him six children. On 18 Jan. 1721
 
success, however. On 29 Oct. 1764 Badeaux was married to Marguerite, daughter of wood-carver Gilles
confirmed by a “donation inter vivos.” She was the first Montreal woman to enter the congregation of Marguerite Bourgeoys
merchant; baptized 25 March 1676 at Montreal, son of Abraham Bouat and Marguerite de Névellet; buried 18 May 1726 in the same town
 
1771 at Quebec, son of Jean Casgrain and Marguerite Cazeau; d. 17 Nov. 1828 at Quebec and was buried four days later under the seigneur’s pew in the church at Rivière-Ouelle, Lower Canada
 
. Hélène Bernier ACND, Charles Glandelet, Le vray esprit de Marguerite Bourgeoys et de l’Institut des sœurs séculières de la
 
Abraham Martin: their wives were sisters, Françoise and Marguerite Langlois. Desportes’ occupation is not known, but he must have had some standing in the community and sufficient education to be
 
[Marguerite Bourgeoys*]” at Quebec. From 1844 to 1970 the convent of Saint-Roch was to have an influence on the history of Quebec by providing an
 
, jp, and militia officer; b. c. 1745 at Pobomcoup (Pubnico), N.S., son of Jacques Mius d’Entremont, third Baron de Pobomcoup, and Marguerite Amirault; m. July 1783
 
. 23 Jan. 1850 in Montreal, son of Paschal Presseault, dit Fabien, a carpenter, and Marguerite Labelle; m. there 11 Feb. 1874 Marguerite Cousineau, and they had eight children
 
GAUDRY, JULIE (baptized Julie-Marguerite Gaudri), Sister of Charity of the Hôpital Général of Montreal; b. 22
 
(dept of Calvados), France, son of Jacques Guillot and Marguerite Loiseleur; m. 25 July 1763 Marie Létourneau, née Rateau, at Quebec; d. some time before 1785, probably in the United
 
a time when, in addition, Bourgchemin was involved in the legal proceedings before the Conseil Souverain instituted by Desjordy and Marguerite
 
Perrine Hubert; m. 1739 Marguerite Lareau at Chambly (Que.); d
 
JACSON, ANTOINE, soldier and wood-carver; b. some time between 1720 and 1730 in the parish of Sainte-Marguerite
 
, daughter of François Laberge, widower, of Château-Richer. Following the death of Marie-Françoise on 28 Nov. 1747, Lambert married on 19 Feb. 1748, Marguerite, the eldest daughter of Jean
 
famous, however, as the result of the discovery in 1965 of the original of the portrait of Marguerite Bourgeoys*, hailed as one of the
 
, Jacques Leneuf de La Poterie, who was bringing from France his daughter Marie-Anne and his wife, Marguerite Legardeur de Repentigny
, she was entrusted to Marguerite Bourgeoys* for her religious instruction. On 24 April 1696 the young girl solemnly abjured her
 
Tanguay* and others, with Jean Loiseau, labourer of Quebec), master locksmith and tinsmith; b. c. 1694, son of François Lozeau and Marguerite Gauron of Rochefort, France; m. 28 Nov
 
. His father, Nicolas Macard, dit Champagne, son of Thomas Macard and Marguerite Hardy, of Mareuil-sur-Dié, had married Marguerite Couillard, daughter of Guillaume
 
. 1801, Nicolas-François Mailhot was a servant in the town; he had no personal possessions and could not write his name. His wife, Marie-Marguerite Roussel, a maidservant from Saint-Michel, near Quebec
of her father’s position as an archivist for the federal government. According to her daughter Marguerite, Marie-Louise spent four years in all in the City of Light and thus developed a fondness for
 
Argentenay seigneury, and had been living there peacefully with his wife Marguerite Boileau for some time, when a certain Jean Terme, of Swiss origin, came and disturbed the happiness of the household by his
 
Canada around 1650, at the age of 20. According to a family tradition, he arrived with a few gold pieces sewn into the lining of his coat. On 22 Oct. 1653, at Quebec, he married Marguerite
 
eldest daughter Véronique became the wife of John Bethune*, Montreal’s first Presbyterian minister. Another daughter, Marguerite, whose
 
WILLIAMS, EUNICE (also known as Marie, Maria, Marguerite, Margarett, Gannenstenhawi, meaning she brings in the corn
Malepart* (Mallepart) de Grand Maison, dit Beaucour, and Marguerite Haguenier; d. 24 June 1794 in Montreal (Que.). François
 
vows. In any case it is known that on 23 Jan. 1736 at Boucherville Simonnet married Léger Bourgy’s widow, Marguerite Bougret Dufort, a 52
 
Hertel* de Moncours, a soldier, son of Joseph-François Hertel* de La Fresnière and Marguerite de
 
.” Charles-Henri d’Aloigny married Geneviève Macard, daughter of Nicolas Macard and Marguerite Couillard on 5 Nov. 1703 at Quebec. Married first to Charles
, son of Antoine Picart, dit Beauchemin, a farmer, and Marguerite Fontaine; m. Louise Valois of Pointe-Claire, Canada East, and they had eight children; d. 29 Nov
 
BIGOT, FRANÇOIS, seigneurial attorney, royal notary, court officer, son of François Bigot, dit Lamothe, and Marguerite
 
Péan de Livaudière, Charles-Marie Couillard de Beaumont, and Marguerite Forestier. The second report put an end to a difficult division of the seigneury of Beaumont after the sale of the
in Paris, daughter of Nicolas Boullé, a secretary in the king’s household, and of Marguerite Alix, both of whom were Calvinists; d. and buried 20 Dec. 1654 at Meaux
 
Ursuline seminary: “Her mother brought her there through fear of the Iroquois.” Like her sisters, including Marguerite
 
; and Germain, born about 1650, who married his first wife, Marguerite Belliveau, in 1673 and his second wife, Madeleine Dugas, in 1682; the third son, Guillaume, left only a daughter
 
, Rigaud de Vaudreuil, and several other prominent individuals. On 16 Oct. 1701, at Varennes, he baptized Marie-Marguerite
 
Aupetit; m. 14 May 1759 Marguerite Vallée in Montreal (Que.), and they had six children; d. 11 May 1815 in Paris, France
 
Chaboillez; m. 10 Nov. 1789 Marguerite Conefroy in Pointe-Claire, Que., and they had seven children, five of whom died in infancy; d. 19 July 1813 in Montreal
 
to his fiancée Marie-Françoise de Thavenet, one of whose sisters, Marguerite*, had married Joseph-François
 
-Cèze, dept. of Gard), France; son of André Chapoton and Anne Lassaigne; m. 16 July 1720 Marguerite Estève at Detroit; d. 11 Nov. 1760 at Detroit
 
, N.S., second son of Major François Comeau and Marguerite Melanson; m. in 1824 Marie-Gertrude Amirault (d. 4 Sept. 1865), and they had four sons and five daughters; d. 27 Nov
 
11 Jan. 1700 Couturier married Marguerite Payet of Pointe-aux-Trembles (near Montreal). They had 13 children. Two daughters married into the Janson dynasty: Charlotte, who married Louis, a
101 to 150 (of 627)
1  2  3  4  ...13